Home

Rocky Mountain Ukulele Orchestra

Bring your ukulele and come play with us!

We rounded up 83 of the best looking string-playing musicians we could find in the Denver-metro, no easy task let me tell you, and then we gave ’em a chance to play so many ukuleles, and holy moly, we rawked … we even had a PURPLE hippopotamus. — Gavin Doremus took this photo. Thanks!

Yup, We’re Doin’ It!Disney on 80+ Ukuleles

Join our world tour! Ticket Info:

May 4th in Denver, Colorado:

We’ll be performing at Historic Grant Avenue (216 S Grant St in Denver) in the 100 year old sanctuary with its remarkable sweet acoustics. Get your Denver tickets through Brown Paper tickets HERE.

May 7th in Lakewood: SOLD OUT … Come join us at Historic Grant Avenue on May 4th.

And check out all the other ukulele events going on around the state HERE.

We can fit 17 more people on the stage and then we have to stop! (Ha.)

It’s a couple hours on Monday nights and a wee bit o’ practice at home and suddenly you’re picking up a Grammy.

We are on a mission to gather up every ukulele-ist wanting to take their playing to the next level. We will teach anybody what you need to know. We think we’re already the largest string orchestra in the Rockies, and we plan on becoming the largest band too … but we gotta catch the tubas first. Please share this idea with your friends who might need a little ukulele music in their lives. We’re pretty nice people and would love to see you and your body guard at one of our rehearsals.

***

IMPORTANT: If you’re new to music or the ukulele, you’ll need a little education prior to joining our daring plan to dominate the known universe. Tackling the orchestra without some background can easily overwhelm even the hardiest of souls, so please check out our Classes page. We will teach you to survive a large orchestra, encourage you to play with smaller groups, and even become a legendary soloist if you wanna put in the work. Contact us today at info@ukuleleorchestra.org. Also, join our Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter feeds to stay current on too many cool things.

As for the future:

We meet on most every Monday night for full orchestra rehearsal. You’ll check in with your “Survival Pod” from 6:20-6:50 pm. Then at 7:00 pm, we continue our assault on brilliance with our advanced repertoire. We’re usually done by 8:15 pm or so. Please arrive no earlier than 6 pm and be ready to help set up. We want to be taking advantage of every possible second, so you need to be in your seat, tuned up, and ready to rawk. Plan to stay a few minutes afterward to clean up. We have lots of chairs and tables that require strong backs and compliant minds to stow away each week.

Please note that while we are not affiliated with the church, we are grateful to them for allowing us to use their opulent parking lot and cavernous fellowship hall for our monstrous sized orchestra. It’s hard to find places anywhere in the Denver-metro capable of handling us.

Stuff You’ll Need to Own Eventually: You can buy most of this stuff from us when you come to rehearsal.

Ukulele.

Tuner.

A pencil.

Black three-ring binder with hard backing.

Music stand (black). (You’ll want to buy the one we sell for $45.)

Music stand light (also black). (We have a great one for $22.)

Kazoo (any color). (We have them from $1 to $30 … they all sound the same.)

White polo shirt with our logo. (You can get these from us.)

Blue jeans. (We encourage wearing pants.)

One all-black outfit. (For the May concert.)

Fee: There is a weekly $5 fee to use the facilities. (Please bring exact change.) There are membership dues of $25 per season (fall and spring) to keep your name on our active RMUO mailing list and your fee also helps provide loaner ukuleles for kids around the state.

Skills: Unlike most modern orchestras, we embrace all ability levels, so don’t be shy. Come join us. If you’re new to music, ukulele, or reading tablature, it will be wise to take one of our Introduction to Ukulele classes. If you are an experienced player, plan to be a soloist, a leader, a teacher, and an inspiration to the rest of us. If you need to be the center of attention, we are not your best option … but we look forward to cheering for you on American Idol.

Orchestra Expectations:

Attend regularly scheduled rehearsals. We know you’ll miss some — you have a life, right? — but please be communicative about when you’ll be gone so we don’t send out an Amber alert. If you miss too much, we may ask you to be a stage hand for our concerts.

Attend and perform at events listed on the orchestra’s calendar. These are in various locations around the city and announced well in advance.

Follow dress codes created for each performance.

Members under 16 years old must bring a supportive adult to the first couple of rehearsals. If you’re full of rock ‘n’ roll you can stay, if we’re acting as your babysitter, ya gotta go.

Pay required fees for participation.

Own a quality ukulele. Be prepared to work to acquire mad skills.

Practice at home to ensure mastery of materials.

Conduct oneself in a manner to promote the interests of the orchestra.

Orchestra Mission:

Rocky Mountain Ukulele Orchestra is a 501(c)3 non-profit dedicated to arranging a diverse rehearsed music repertoire for solo and ensemble performance in an educational atmosphere. We promote introductory and advanced music development using the ukulele as our principal instrument. We nurture beginning ukulele players as well as composers, advanced performers, and teachers, and we actively encourage community involvement to promote music education for everyone.

Thanks To:

The Rocky Mountain Ukulele Orchestra thanks Jim Olson (the dude with the vision to give this a try way back in 2011 when ukulele wasn’t hip), Kelly Graham, Susan Martin, Nathalie Renfroe, Tim Hoffman and the rest of the staff with the City of Lakewood’s Heritage, Culture and the Arts division. They’ve helped us with a place to call home, creating a wonderful environment for teaching and learning music. As we’ve grown, we’ve enjoyed and appreciated the staffs at Washington Heights, Lakewood Cultural Center, Clements Community Center, Historic Grant Avenue, and Green Mountain United Methodist church. A lot of people have tolerated us over the years … thank you!

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

We only bug ya a little about super important ukulele stuff. And if you decide later you think free ukulele music, great jokes, and rare opportunities are lame-o, it will be easy to unsubscribe. And be honest, you rarely read your email anyway now that you found ukulele.

King Soopers Supports Ukuleles!

You Can Support Ukulele Education in Colorado Every Time You Buy Groceries

Click HERE or on the King Soopers logo above and register your “fob” your “King Soopers card” or your phone number as your “Alternate ID” and every time you buy groceries, King Soopers will make a donation to the Rocky Mountain Ukulele Orchestra. We’ll use that money to pay our teachers to offer free ukulele classes around the state!

How to Support Us

We are continuously raising funds to be used in part to pay ukulele teachers to offer instructional programs throughout Colorado. Please help us below by shopping with the Amazon Smile program, or donating directly via PayPal using your credit card. Thank you for supporting community musical education in the Rocky Mountains.

Amazon Smile

Donate via PayPal

Follow Us

This is Henry. He's in charge of our Twitter account. If we post things that don't make sense, he's gotten into the catnip again.